The atoms or molecules of a gas will increase in thermal energy when the gas is compressed. The kinetic energy of those atoms or molecules will increase as they are forced closer together in compression, and the temperature of the gas will increase.
1). It occupies less Volume.
2). Either its Temperature or its Pressure increase, because [ PV/T ] remains constant.
When a gas is compressed, its volume decreases and its temperature (and pressure) increase.
nothing. It stays the same.
The density increases.
Depends on the type of gas...
NO
Yes, a gas can be easily compressed.
A gas can be compressed more than a liquid and a solid.
For a fixed mass of gas, the gas will become compressed by pressure and its volume will decrease. This is why pressurized gas containers explode when breached: the container breach eliminates the barrier between the gas compressed by the container and the outside air; the pressurized gas immediately increases the volume it occupies in the explosive decompression until its density equals the density of the regular atmosphere.
Yes, when a gas is compressed it could form into a solid or liquid substance.
The density of a fluid will increase according to applied pressure. Even water can be compressed so much that it eventually turns into a metallic substance. Compressed fluids will however not remain in this state when pressure is released.
Yes It does increase. http://webbook.nist.gov/chemistry/fluid/ While this website doesn't include chlorine, any gas that is compressed will increase in density. Different gasses all have different compression-density relationships, but all gasses that are compressed will increase in density.
It does not change, unless a chemical reaction in the gas happens.
There will be the same amount of gas but in a smaller space. Density is mass/volume So as volume decreases and mass is constant, the density increases.
The density increases..
If you compress a gas the temperature increases
Its density increases.
Depends on the density of the gas.
Asking "what is the density of a gas" is just like asking "what is the density of a liquid or solid". This entirely depends on what gas it is and only in the case of gases, what temperature and pressure it is at too.
what happens to interstellear gas as it passes through a spiral density wave
A consequence is the decrease of density.
The temperature and speed remain constant.
You can't compress water when it is a liquid. That's why hydraulic systems work the way they do.